Transformative-Activist and Social Justice Approaches to the History of Psychology

A. Stetsenko
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The history of psychology is characterized by unparalleled complexity of its methodology and uniquely ambiguous subject matter closely entangled with issues of power, social justice, and ethics. This complexity requires inordinate levels of reflexivity and conceptual sophistication. In effect, a historian of psychology needs to explicate no less than one’s worldview—a broad position as to how people are situated in the world, relate to, change, and get to know it, and how knowledge develops through time—all coupled with one’s broad sociopolitical ethos. Traditional histories of psychology have operated with an astonishing lack of reflection about these issues. One of many deplorable results is that psychology still grapples with its racist and sexist legacies and lacks awareness of social injustices in existence today. The recently emerging approaches have begun to remedy this situation by focusing on situated practices of knowledge production. This article addresses how human agency can be integrated into these approaches, while focusing on knowledge production as not only situated in context but also, and critically, as a world-forming and history-making process. In tackling the shortcomings of relational approaches including social constructionism, the transformative activist stance approach draws on Marxist philosophy and epistemology—infused with insights from Vygotsky’s psychology and other critical theories of resistance. The core point is that knowledge is achieved in and through collaborative community practices realized by individually unique contributions as these come to embody and enact, in an inseparable blend, both cultural-historical contexts and unique commitments and agency of community members. The acts of being-doing-knowing are non-neutral, transformative processes that produce the world, its history and also people themselves, all realized in the process of taking up the world, rather than passively copying it or coping with it. And since reality is in-the-making by people themselves, knowing is about creating the world and knowing it in the very act of bringing about transformative and creative change. Thus, the historicity and situativity of knowledge are ascertained alongside a focus on its ineluctable fusion with an activist, future-oriented, political-ethical stance. Therefore, the critical challenge for the history of psychology is to understand producers of knowledge in their role of actors in the drama of life (rather than only of ideas), that is, as agents of history- and world-making, while also engaging in self-reflection on the historians’ own role in these processes, in order to practice history in responsive and responsible, that is, activist ways.
心理学史的变革-活动家和社会正义方法
心理学的历史以其方法论的空前复杂性和与权力、社会正义和伦理问题紧密纠缠在一起的独特的模棱两可的主题为特征。这种复杂性需要高度的反身性和概念复杂性。实际上,一个心理学历史学家需要解释的不仅仅是自己的世界观——一个关于人们如何在世界上生存、与世界联系、改变和了解世界,以及知识如何随着时间发展的广泛立场——所有这些都与一个人广泛的社会政治气质相结合。传统的心理学史对这些问题的反思少得惊人。许多令人遗憾的结果之一是,心理学仍然在努力解决其种族主义和性别歧视的遗留问题,并且缺乏对当今存在的社会不公正的认识。最近出现的方法已经开始通过关注知识生产的情境实践来纠正这种情况。本文将讨论如何将人的能动性整合到这些方法中,同时将重点放在知识生产上,不仅将其置于环境中,而且批判性地将其作为世界形成和历史创造的过程。在解决包括社会建构主义在内的关系方法的缺陷时,变革的行动主义立场方法借鉴了马克思主义哲学和认识论,并注入了维果茨基心理学和其他抵抗批判理论的见解。核心观点是,知识是通过协作的社区实践获得的,这些实践是通过个人独特的贡献实现的,因为这些贡献在不可分割的混合中体现和制定,包括文化历史背景和社区成员的独特承诺和代理。“存在-行动-认知”的行为是非中性的、变革的过程,它产生了世界、世界的历史和人自己,所有这些都是在接受世界的过程中实现的,而不是被动地复制世界或应对世界。因为现实是由人们自己创造的,所以了解就是创造世界,并且在带来变革和创造性变化的过程中了解它。因此,知识的历史性和情境性被确定,同时关注其与积极的、面向未来的、政治伦理立场的不可避免的融合。因此,心理学史的关键挑战是理解知识的生产者在生活戏剧中的角色(而不仅仅是思想),也就是说,作为历史和世界创造的代理人,同时也要对历史学家自己在这些过程中的角色进行自我反思,以便以回应和负责任的方式实践历史,也就是说,积极的方式。
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